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Uriel Bitton
Uriel Bitton

Posted on • Edited on

Why you should Stop using CSS Frameworks

Yes CSS frameworks can be useful and speed up web design time which is the main purpose of why they were created.

But the issue with using CSS frameworks is that:

  1. You will eventually forget css and not be able to use it when css frameworks are not an option
  2. Having custom styles is complicated (overriding issues) and will require multiple css files to be loaded.
  3. Designing custom styled apps and websites is awesome and very creative as well as challenging, why avoid this? (My main reason)
  4. Your designs will look generic, many people use bootstrap, material ui, etc. They all look the same.
  5. Create your own css framework to use as your own personal style, this is much more rewarding and can be reused for future projects.

There are many more reasons i dislike css frameworks. These are just the main ones.

Do you agree? Let me know your thoughts below!

Edit
To clarify, as some people got a little excited, this article is an opinion piece and not meant to change people's way of doings things. I am simply dicussing why i don't like CSS frameworks, if you like to use them then by all means please do. This article only suggests, it does not force you to stop using frameworks - the title is just provocative on purpose.

Top comments (73)

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bholmesdev profile image
Ben Holmes • Edited

Hm, I feel there's a lot of nuance here that's worth considering.

First, I'd want to draw a distinction between a) pre-styled, prescriptive frameworks like Material UI and Bootstrap and b) utility frameworks like Reach UI and Tailwind CSS.

The former definitely comes in handy for anyone trying to build full stack applications without a design team on standby. For such an audience, the training wheels provided by, say, Material UI components are critical for moving fast.

These training wheels also ensure accessibility guidelines are met without as much research on the developer's part. You may not think about it, but hacking together dropdowns and tab sliders that look good won't always work well for all people. I recently wrote a longform post on building an accessible navbar for this very reason; there's so many little things to consider that Material UI et al. will consider ahead-of-time!

Now let's consider those utility frameworks. If you're unfamiliar, frameworks like Reach UI provide a "skeleton" of CSS and React components to build your own visual identity on top of. This framework merely exists to help you hit accessibility guidelines for modals, tabs, custom select boxes, etc, while also giving you powerful CSS selectors to build from. I'm a CSS warrior myself, so I lean on this type of CSS framework super hard to get things done.

I also threw in the Tailwind utility framework, which also empowers you to build your CSS from a set of building blocks. However, this takes an entirely different approach to the problem that's worth its own evaluation. Check out this post by @swyx to understand that one a bit better.

My personal stance

Overall, I think writing off CSS frameworks is a bit of a hand-wavy statement to make given the huge landscape of tools out there right now. There will always be a place for prebuilt solutions like Material UI; if anything, I see them as one step removed from powerhouses like SquareSpace or Wordpress (closer to the code, but with a lot of details abstracted away). Also, for the sake of accessibility and developer speed, anything from Reach UI to Tailwind should fit the bill for some.

Still, keep hacking away my friend! I'm right there with ya 😁

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nomade55 profile image
Lucas G. Terracino

This should be a post itself. Very good insight.

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bholmesdev profile image
Ben Holmes

Well, I took your suggestion. Decided to turn this comment into a longer-form post 😁

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

Good point, i general agree with most of the things you say. However, many beginners use css frameworks and that is simply self-damaging. CSS frameworks are best used by experienced developers working on large business projects alone without a team to help the developer. This i can understand. What i can't understand is when the framework is being used to build simple websites for clients and small passion projects.

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bholmesdev profile image
Ben Holmes

I totally agree; frameworks aren't the best fit for every use case. I've built quite a few projects recently without any frameworks at all since I'm a CSS warrior at heart.

Still, there's something to be said for utility frameworks like Reach UI on this front. These are perfect for nailing accessibility guidelines out of the box, but still leaving the door open for custom CSS on top. Very little is left to the imagination! It just gives you a baseline to work from, and guides you on custom styling (with documentation!) using simple CSS classes.

I really like the direction of these frameworks in particular over powerhouses like Material UI (which you probably had in mind when writing this post). Still, to each their own.

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athomsfere profile image
Austin French

But many new developers also get thrown into the deep-end of a full stack.

When it comes to data integrity, solid business logic, a good view (HTML, Js) and CSS, writing custom CSS when something like bootstrap does most of it OoB... Choosing to write your own is potentially the least important and impactful to the product owner and technical leads. I'd agree with them most of the time too. Far too often the CSS is the worst written 'code' of an application. Where I go from "This site looks pretty good" to "Holy hell, how is this maintained?"

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coopercodes profile image
🧸 🏳️‍🌈 cooper-codes 💻 🎮

Hell yes!

Let's delete the original post and replace it with this.

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lamambasan profile image
San Lamamba

Very good of breaking down the problem 👌🏾

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vaibhavfuke profile image
Vaibhav

Yes correct. If we have infinite time then don't use css frameworks. The main aim of the framework and utility is to reduce development/designing time. End user don't care what you have or haven't use. Beginners should use css. But professional should use utility frameworks cause they need to get work done. Big fan of tailwind🥳

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mzaini30 profile image
Zen

I usually use Bootstrap for finish my projects fast. Then, no complain from clients. No problem.

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pmejna profile image
Przemyslaw Mejna

I hate all CSS frameworks but in real life all is about efficiency. Projects need to be done, there are deadlines. If you can do what is on the mockup with framework and that will make your task faster - why not? Of course if you will get a website mockup which will need custom solution - you will have to use CSS and make it this way. I think we need to work the way is best for us. That's why I don't tell anybody to not use a frameworks or work only with vanilla CSS because this is not my business

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mzaini30 profile image
Zen

I usually use all framework for finish projects fast. Like Bootstrap, Svelte, etc

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leob profile image
leob • Edited

But, isn't there a large amount of mundane "basics" (e.g. CSS resets, just to name one) which you then have to take care of every time? I don't necessarily have to have a complete framework, but unless I can start with some of those basics having taken care of for me (CSS reset, grid system, typography) I'd be afraid that this would slow me down (well at least the first time, when I have to sort it all out).

Apart from that, the arguments against CSS frameworks are much less valid against utility style frameworks like Tailwind. And no, even when using Bootstrap I'm in no way afraid of forgetting CSS :-)

Last but not least, I agree that this line of reasoning (don't use JS frameworks but use Vanilla JS, don't use CSS frameworks, etc) does become more compelling and realistic as browsers become more capable and the minimum browser support that you can build on is getting way better. Back in the days of IE8 I think people were relieved that frameworks took care of all of IE's quirks and bugs.

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

I definitely agree with you man, which is why i encourage to build your own frameworks or at least build your own reset styles framework. I use my own reset styes and a light framework that i designed from scratch for all my web projects. Trust me its so much more rewarding then using css frameworks. Now don't get me wrng if you're building a large business project website or app that requires a huge amount of styling then sure a framework may be a good decision. But my article refers mainly to people who use it for normal websites, and small passion projects. That's what i don't vouch for. Again this is just my opinion, i respect everyone's opinion in the matter!
Thanks for sharing :)

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leob profile image
leob

Totally agree, when I have got some time on my hands (generally I don't, haha) then I definitely would like to do that - build a small "foundation" (excuse the pun, haha) because I'm convinced you can learn a LOT from that!

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gsarig profile image
Giorgos Sarigiannidis • Edited

While personally I clearly prefer writing my own CSS (here is my reasoning), I agree with those who say that it depends on the specific use-case.

As others pointed out, if you are a developer with no design skills and no specific design at hand, then using a framework like material UI or Bootstrap is not only helpful, but I would dare say, essential.

If for whatever reason you want to write the less CSS possible, either because you hate it and/or because you are not good at it, then a utility framework like Tailwind might be your thing.

If you work on a big project along with other people, again, a framework might be helpful to keep the code consistent.

If, on the other hand, you have to convert a design from a PSD, XD or whatever to HTML, then, depending on the design's complexity, a framework might even turn out to be an obstacle rather than a help.

Also, I am a fan of avoiding frameworks when I have to build a plugin or a theme meant to be used by anyone and not for a specific client. On those cases, I believe that the less dependencies, the better (that applies to the use of vanilla JS instead of jQuery as well).

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etienneburdet profile image
Etienne Burdet

Let's be realistic: after your 10th job where you need to implement CSS tabs (or cards with header/footer, button with hover etc.), what will you do? Either copy-paste from old project, or start having snippet with parameters. Same with utility classes, same with spacing and typography.

Either way, you won't do it from scratch every job. In wich case you're just better off using a framework that does it well, with all the accesibility, style coherence etc.

Also:

  • much less need to document your CSS for your workmates. Somebody has already done the job and probably did much better than you will ever do.
  • The structure of components and utility classes will be easier to learn for your team—if not by yourself. By many orders of magnitude.
  • Why is this combination of classes not working?", "Ho, I need to fix that. In the mean time you can do this hack". Never get fixed.
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jamespagedev profile image
James Page

The problem is there are so many styling frameworks out there now where every time I join a new team or start a new project the project lead wants a new style framework everyone has to use. This makes it feel like "I'm doing it from scratch ever time", and I have to learn css all over again in the way the framework dev(s) want me to learn it.

As long as developers use good patterns and clean code, their pieces should be re-usable throughout projects and css should really be enough. We used to believe in good code... what happened :(

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

custom css always and forever :)

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amiamigo97 profile image
Ami Amigo

Exactly! That's why you need your own CSS system/framework

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

Sure that's why i encourage developing your own css frameworks from designs you created yourself!

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cchana profile image
Charanjit Chana

I personally prefer to steer away from resets and frameworks but the minute someone else gets involved in the project then a well documented framework is something I would seriously consider.

I’ve seen the advantages of using Bootstrap first hand. I may not have been in love with how it looked, but it enabled multiple teams to build rich interfaces while concentrating on functionality. We could deliver functionality quickly and there was still the ability to theme it if we wanted to.

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chrisdemars profile image
Chris DeMars

Forget a framework and utility library. Roll your own!

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

exactly my point, thank you!

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trollboy_j profile image
Jacko

I'm not an expert on CSS frameworks, so please correct me if I am wrong, but can't you customize the designs from Bootstrap into your own? You don't have to use the templates they give you. I know that requires knowing at least some CSS, but in the long run, the title says it all: a framework.

Like I said, I never got into using frameworks because I couldn't wrap my head around them, so please correct me if I'm wrong. Happy coding to you and everyone else. ^^

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

It is not meant to and it gets very complex to customize bootstrap css, there will be much clashing of styles, overriding issues, etc. Its a nightmare

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jamespagedev profile image
James Page

I would also add you are now required to use !important tags just about everywhere (which is something you should never use in a project done right)

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urielbitton profile image
Uriel Bitton

exactly!

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ekafyi profile image
Eka • Edited

If you work with web UI in any way (which includes, eg., as a frontend developer working in a JS-based framework), you have to be comfortable with--and proficient in--CSS fundamentals.

That's it literally.

Use a CSS framework, don't use a framework, use BEM/SMACSS, use CSS-in-JS, use a UI component library (one higher level of abstraction) if it helps you and your colleagues achieve your product's objective more efficiently. These technicalities are subjective decisions.

You can "be creative" and make "awesome websites" and have a unique-looking design and fast websites with any of those stacks as long as you have strong foundations on CSS, HTML, the web APIs, and your chosen tech stack.

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nieuwepixels profile image
Nieuwe Pixels

I read pros and cons in the replies, still I think the point didn't cross over (I am assuming)

As for me I also stopped using frameworks and went more modular.

In short, i have a SCSS for building the grids and rows and then I build on top of that. Yes, I have some common files in place allready also for generic stuff like buttons, forms and such.

If this was the intention of this post I get it and I think there's a valid point to be made to at least evaluate the need for a framework.

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